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Words that sound like "castle" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A surname.
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An independent city in northern Hesse, central Germany.
A surname from German.
An unincorporated community in Hardy, West Virginia, United States.
(N)
a district (Kreis) in the south of Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.
(v)
(transitive) To invalidate or annul something.
a video game developed by Quicksilver and published by Interplay Entertainment in 1991 and 1992.
(pharmacy) A small container containing a dose of medicine.
(adj)
Of, relating to, or being a cause of something; causing.
(historical) A medieval kingdom and former county in the Iberian Peninsula; the nucleus of modern Spain.
Obsolete spelling of cancel. [(transitive) To cross out something with lines etc.]
A male given name from Irish.
(grammar) Of or relating to a case.
Qasa, in oral tradition also known as Kamba, was a short-lived mansa of the Mali Empire.
Furnished with castles.
(historical) In early Ireland, a ringfort or a circular stone structure used for defense.
A surname from Czech
A surname from Polish.
A small castle.
Trouble, bother, unwanted annoyances or problems.
Initialism of guaranteed student loan.
united states psychologist noted for his work in child development (1880-1961)
(obsolete) Alternative form of Castile. [(historical) A medieval kingdom and former county in the Iberian Peninsula; the nucleus of modern Spain.]
A mammalian beast of burden, much used in desert areas, of the genus Camelus.
Domesticated animal of the species Bos taurus (cows, bulls, steers, oxen etc), and other hoofed mammals of the genus Bos.
(specifically) A (usually traditional) religious or secular song sung at Christmastime.
(slang) house
A female given name.
A laugh resembling the cry of a hen or goose.
Food, such as a stew, cooked in such a dish.
(geography) Relating to the coast; on or near the coast; longshore.
Lewis Carroll - pseudonym of British author Charles Lutwidge Dodgson.
(by extension) An official residing in major foreign towns to represent and protect the interests of the merchants and citizens of their country.
A surname from Irish, a less common spelling of Carroll, derived from the Irish Ó Cearbhaill.
A female given name from French, variant of Carol
A petty or trivial objection or criticism.
An item of clerical clothing: a long, sheath-like, close-fitting, ankle-length robe worn by clergy members of some Christian denominations.
(historical) A tribe of Iron Age Britain in the first century BCE, known only from a brief mention in the writings of Julius Caesar.
(by extension) A partitioned space for reading or studying, often in a library.
A unisex given name transferred from the surname, of modern usage.
Alternative form of Cassay. [Former name of Manipur.]
(computer languages) Initialism of Collaborative Application Markup Language.
A bituminous coal that burns brightly with much smoke.
make a cackling sound
A human tower formed in festivals in Catalonia.
An ornate capital letter used in calligraphy, consisting of interlaced pen strokes. See :Commons:Cadel letters.
A surname from Welsh.
the Coosa River in Georgia and Alabama, USA, which is a tributary of the Alabama River.
(dialectal) A horse's bit.
As much as a case will hold.
Alternative form of catch-all. [Any place or repository where things are placed indiscriminately or without careful thought.]
(anatomy) Relating to the vena cava.
(geometry) Alternative form of coaxial. [(geometry) Having a common central axis]
Of or like a chasm.
Any place or repository where things are placed indiscriminately or without careful thought.